Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Triangle Constellation

View through Harvard Museums
Rights: © Carlos Amorales, 2015
Department of Modern & Contemporary Art Carlos Amorales sold; [through Kurimanzutto Mexico City]; to the Harvard Art Museums 2015. Harvard Art Museums/Fogg Museum Gift of Leslie Cheek Jr.
image-zoom
Title: Triangle Constellation
Description not available.

Related Results

Constellations (painting, recto and verso), folio from a manuscript of the Aja'ib al-Makhluqat by Qazwini
Constellations (painting, recto and verso), folio from a manuscript of the Aja'ib al-Makhluqat by Qazwini
This folio represents the Constellation of the Eagle, in the form of a blue fleur-de-lys; Constellation of the bird, also called the Chicken (probably Ornis, Cygnus, the Swan); Con...
The Constellation Cassiopeia (painting, recto; text, verso), folio from an Arabic manuscript of the Kitab Suwar al-Kawakib of al-Sufi
The Constellation Cassiopeia (painting, recto; text, verso), folio from an Arabic manuscript of the Kitab Suwar al-Kawakib of al-Sufi
Gold disks scattered across this seated figure mark the major stars of the constellation Cassiopeia. Named “The Enthroned One” (dhat al-kursi) in Arabic, this constellation of the ...
James Rosenquist: Tripartite Series
James Rosenquist: Tripartite Series
Drawn to the teachings of the Zen philosopher Sengai Gibon, [James Rosenquist](/artist/james-rosenquist) believed that the world could be entirely represented with three simple sha...
Anonymous, The culmination of Renaissance ingenuity and scientific achievement: Celestial sphere with traces of a mechanism. (c1540-c1550)
Anonymous, The culmination of Renaissance ingenuity and scientific achievement: Celestial sphere with traces of a mechanism. (c1540-c1550)
Celestial sphere, two large brass fretwork hemispheres joined at the equator with two sets of rings. The first set consists of five parallel horizontal rings representing the Equat...
Bacchus and Ariadne
Bacchus and Ariadne
The present pair of canvases depicts the weddings of Neptune, god of the sea, and Bacchus, god of wine. They can be dated to the early 1690s during the time Ricci was in Rome. Amo...

Back to Top